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Pool safety bill signed by President Bush

(AP) - President Bush signed legislation Wednesday aimed at
strengthening pool safety, six months after a 6-year-old girl had
part of her intestinal tract torn out by a drain's powerful suction
at a wading pool.

The legislation would ban the manufacture, sale or distribution
of drain covers that don't meet anti-entrapment safety standards.

The House approved it as part of an energy bill, following Senate
passage last week, and President Bush signed the bill Wednesday morning.

On June 29, Abigail Taylor of Edina was injured when she sat
over an open drain hole in a wading pool at the Minneapolis Golf
Club.

This week, she had a transplant operation for a small bowel,
liver and pancreas at Nebraska Medical Center in Omaha, said the
family attorney, Bob Bennett. She was listed in serious condition
Tuesday.

It was thought that Abigail would need a feeding tube for the
rest of her life, but the transplants could make that unnecessary,
Bennett said.

The family was with Abigail and unavailable for comment, Bennett
said. But he said they were happy with the bill's passage and see
it as an important first step.

The legislation, the Virginia Graeme Baker Pool and Spa Safety
Act, is named for another victim, the 7-year-old granddaughter of
former Secretary of State James Baker. She drowned at a graduation
party in 2002, when the suction from a drain pinned her.

The girl's mother, Nancy Baker, said she was "ecstatic" about
the bill's passage.

"I'm also grateful and relieved," said Baker, James Baker's
former daughter-in-law. "I'm honored for my daughter, and for the
other kids whose injuries this led to."

Baker recalled how one of her daughters told her, "'Graeme is
at the bottom of the hot tub.' I jumped in, and I couldn't pull her
up." It took two men to finally pull her out.

She said that the bill's passage will give meaning to her
daughter's death and the deaths of other children.

The House sponsor, Rep. Debbie Wasserman Schultz, D-Fla., said
that the tragedy of accidental drowning by children "is made even
more painful by the knowledge that these types of accidents are
preventable.

"We must implement national standards to replace the haphazard
safety measures that allowed Graeme, and hundreds of children like
her, to be lost in such nightmare scenarios."

Sen. Amy Klobuchar, D-Minn., credited the Taylor family for
helping to push the cause this year.

"I have absolutely no doubt that the family's persistence made
a difference," she said.

Klobuchar won passage of an amendment that made the bill's
restrictions apply to existing public pools, not just new pools,
and another one that requires public pools to include technology to
shut off suction when a drain is blocked. The Senate bill was
sponsored by Mark Pryor, D-Ark.

Klobuchar said she spoke with the girl's father, Scott Taylor,
nearly every week, including a conversation Tuesday.

"He is just so committed to making sure this doesn't happen to
a little girl again," Klobuchar said. "He knew that this was a
way to spur action."

Sen. Norm Coleman, a Minnesota Republican and like Klobuchar a
co-sponsor of the bill, said, "This bill will help ensure that
instances like the tragic injuries to Abigail Taylor do not happen
in the future by requiring safety measures that are long overdue."

A children's safety group and the trade group for pools, spas
and hot tubs both supported the legislation.

"It is a monumental injury-prevention piece of legislation,"
said Alan Korn, director of public policy for Safe Kids Worldwide.
"They did a very good job of addressing a leading killer of
kids."

Bill Weber, president of the Association of Pool and Spa
Professionals, said the legislation "will definitely promote a
higher level of child safety around pools, spas and hot tubs in a
responsible way."